EXTREME SIMPLE Traditional Japanese Wood Joinery - Hand Cut Three-Way Wood Joints Structure
EXTREME SIMPLE Traditional Japanese Wood Joinery - Hand Cut Three-Way Wood Joints Structure
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I’m a carpenter of 27 years experience in Australia. I can unashamedly and honestly say…. I wouldn’t have a hope in hell of making this sort of craftsmanship. Absolutely 100% beautiful workmanship
This is NOT simple. That´s a piece of art.
❤❤❤
exactly what I am thinking. Great joint made by a very skilled woodcraft specialist.
I wanted to make a smarty-pants comment about how easy that looks etc, but clearly this man has a special talent and eye for detail!!
@farmerted-treefarmerplenip9665 yeah it looks easy but if you would try this yourself you'll probably waste a lot of wood because you just did it slightly wrong every time.
The idea is kind of simple, but when it comes to the craftmanship... don´t try this at home! Wonderful to see a Master at work! I would never try that myself.
Extreme simple 😅 - sure if one has a CNC-controlled hand like this guy!! Perfect handcraft!👍
That comes with years of experience
I train many CNC machinist, I call we are "button pusher" because 90% of what we did is push the buttons.
@@lucthien601 If you are a button pusher, than you do not belong in teaching others how to use a CNC manual and computer machine. This video is great, and hands on is great, but to call CNC machinist a button pusher, is pathetic. You are not button pushers, you are someone that knows how to program and machine manual and computer way. That takes schooling, and practice, and knowledge, experience and so on. It is a trade but also an art.
Love to watch this man. A Japanese Paul sellers? His chisels are absolutely superb as well as his work. Brilliant videos, no stupid music, no stupid talk. Rob Cosman , Paul sellers, Stumpy Nubs and one or two others are similarly sensible and a delight to watch Thank you
He's not Japanese.
Gut gemacht
Cutting square and straight with such a saw is testimony to his skill. I’m in awe of such a craftsman
Especially cutting the end grain
@@barrymacokiner9423 especially getting that 45 started so easily
Every woodworking school should be required to show videos like this to their students before they blow all their money on 500$ bench chisels, 500$ mortise chisels, a 300$ dovetail saw along with an equally expensive dozuki, a 99$ mallet (notice this craftsman used a stick), multiple hundreds of dollars of sexy squares, measuring and marking tools, a 5000$ bench and just because, a 300$ for an apron, coffee mug, hat and t-shirt from Lee Valley Tools (or similar vendors). My first woodworking class, I was asked to make a lap joint out of pine. Among the other members of my class were a few immigrants from China who had no fancy tools. This is not an exaggeration: they made the lap joint using mainly a box of disposable razor blades and an old hacksaw blade twice as fast and far more precise than I did with my "cold-forged in the heart of a star and wielded by Thor and Japanese gods at an RC hardness of 10 billion, yet simple to sharpen, and precision handles that were completely indestructible, yet completely comfortable and perfectly fitting to my gentle hands" 300$ chisels.
And those same persons with all of their fancy expensive tools shouldn’t be allowed to have a KZhead channel until they learn to do it the ‘hard’ way first! I’m of the opinion that if you can’t cut a sheet of plywood in half with nothing more than an old Diston hand saw, a string line, and a knee bench, you’ve got no carpentry skills.
@@Trapper_Creek_2024お
The ‘$’ goes before the amount not afterward. Other than that - well put!
@@Trapper_Creek_2024 cry harder bro. Some of us do woodworking for the end result. As long as the piece is durable and built right I don’t give a damn what tool you use. I will use whatever tool. Gets it done the quickest.
There an survival/bushcrafting adage: knowledge weighs nothing Expertise and skills replaces a lot of heavy(expensive) equipment.
Old school. Reminds me of my early apprentice days while building The Mayflower.
♥
lmao
What a pleasure this natural sound of work in progress instead of that f*cking music which everybody else takes as a duty to force us to listen to
The layout skill is what makes it all possible. One bad line and sayonara to that joint!
i really appreciate your ability to teach, it goes to show you dont always have to speak to demonstrate an idea and then pass that info along
The Master Craftsman demonstrated the real essence of creating innovative, intricate, accurate, strong joint, is “Visionary “ . That means , making the invisible be visible .
Love this joint. I use it often. ONLY difference is I recess the smaller "cross/beam" boards into post half way(notch). This looks good. Awesome for table. But for structure the cross beam load/weight is reduced to very small portion. "Notch" solves this. Thank You for video!
Beautiful work by a Master carpenter! I also noticed you take great care to work with sharp chisels which are so important! Thank you for sharing!
Yeah, I'd love to see a sharpening demo from this guy
Guy makes straighter cuts with his hand saw than I do with my table saw
Traditional carpentry at its best. Thank you for inviting me round 🌞
I see why Japanese furniture made long ago is so highly esteemed.
There are temples in Asia built over 1200 years ago still standing strong thru wars, earthquakes, and hurricanes. They are disassembled, inspected, repaired and rebuilt every 600 years as planned. Medieval European joinery uses similar techniques. Modern (corporate) products are designed to fail or go out of style (planned obsolescence), otherwise the "economy" doesn't work. As an engineer, that really honks me off.
That’s amazing. No nails, screws, no glue required. All natural ❤
thanks ♥
Japanese craftsmen ship is always amazing. You can always see and feel the quality in there products. Thank you for the video.
Much more enjoyable than watching these would-be carpenters doing a so-so job with power tools and nails and screws (oh, i forgot, with glue too)
So much information without a single word spoken.
incredible precision for handwork. Respect earned.
beautiful workmanship, furniture quality.
I must have missed the "extremely simple" part 🙂
simple is not the same as easy 🙂🙃
@@aaronjaben7913 True. But the geometry of this is more complex than a dove tail, too. IMO.
You are a Master Joiner!! Your skill with hand tools is superb. They are the original cordless hand tools!! Thank you demonstrating your skills.🙏🙏
Very nice work. I can't imagine building anything like this, though. It would take me 3-4 hours to do what was just shown in the video, and probably even took over an hour for the pro who did it to do it. Still, it was very interesting to watch and I do appreciate the skills needed. Thank you for sharing.
EXTREME...but not SIMPLE!!!😂 This is a very highly skilled master at work... most if us will only be able to watch.. 😅
just shows how a true craftsman doesn’t need all the fancy powered tool to do the job, no lasers, dado cutters etc just a chisel,hammer and saw and lots and lots of experience and knowledge, a joy to watch
Impressive. Seeing the chisel mastery was great. Nice job.
Not going to lie. I’ve lived in Japan almost 20 years now and this guy is pretty good but sloppy compared to most of the small town wood workers I’m used to. But then again, I was outside cutting mortis and tenon joints some locals were so amazed I was doing it with a table saw.
Very well done.Should be featured on This Old Hut!
I was thinking his angles were slightly out then he proved me wrong by coming back with his hand skills n chisel work very good indeed
Extreme simple would have built a house by now, this man has 1/4th of a table.
phenomenal. The precision to cut the angles....
I'm envisioning a porch here. Would NOT the joint had MORE strength mortised into the 4x4 in the THICK PARTS? STILL BEAUTIFUL WORK! m
I've done Dovetail Joints and now I want to learn Japanese Mortice and Tennon joints. I love this joint, but it seems more decorative. the horizontal member's strength is only using a sliver, (1/2"-3/4") of the member's width?
♥
This guy creates better joinery with his handtools. Then most people can do with all of their power tools in their shop. I would’ve loved to be able to train with this guy for a month or two. He is exceptional and what he does..he certainly knows how to keep those chisel sharp too.
I’d love to see a carpenter in the U.K. with this guy’s skill.
It’s beautiful and elegant, but definitely not easy. It would require some skill to achieve the same result with power tools, let alone doing it by hand.
Wonderful craftsmanship
What an elegant design!
♥ yes
I'm no expert carpenter but wouldn't this take 100x as long??
😂😂😂
You have no brain
A beautiful joint, albeit a weak one. Works fine with oversized beams, though.
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Nice----very nice..Good to see this kind of craftsmanship...
Thank you……
Mesmerising! Where can I find out how you get those chisels so sharp?
In practice.
Damn! I was hoping to watch a 5-minute KZhead clip and become a master...@@normbograham
Beautiful. That’s truly handwork carpentry.
Yeah, that is not simple in any way shape or form. That is amazing talent.
I have trouble getting a good miter joint with a compound miter saw! I’m not worthy!
Im surprised the post didnt twist during the video with that bullseye dead center
Thank you master 🎉
I wish we could get Japanese wood working tools in the US
This man loves working with wood! 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
nice handling of the gauge (trusquin ?), i never got how to correctly use that stuff
Amazing craftmanship!
I seriously question the strength of that joint. Looks pretty but I doubt it’s as strong as it could be.
From what I understand, they have developed these types of techniques intentionally because of the regular earthquakes. The joints are tight but move with the earth and they don't try to fight against it and inevitably break.
I would have that thing all screwed up using a bow saw.
Thanks for taking me on this journey hello from Australia.
If that's exteme simple ¿What would it be extremely difficult?
What is the type/size of chisel you use to clean the walls of the mortise?
That guy could probably crush walnuts with his hands. Grip strength like a god.
Guy says simple, and then goes on to make nicer cuts with a huge hand saw then my bandsaw can make xD
thank you! very impressive use of hand tools, nice to see
Very sharp chisels!
If this is simple, I'd hate to see complicated. This requires perfectly square mortices, tenons, hand-saw cuts, and angle cuts. There is no room for error or adjustment. I agree that the result is beautiful. It is anything but "extreme simple".
Excessively complicated for the strength and too much labour for the simple requirement. Showing off.
@@chrisbusby3086 so, what was the video about? Showing how to make that joint. Thats it, the piece had no other requirements as I could see, and hence, your claim is that the material size ( which made it easy to see, because it was large), and the work put in to make the exact joint that he meant to show off, was too complicated for you. Showing off? How else whas he supposed to show how it could be done well, and look good? Not film it?
Masterful craftsmanship and okay for furniture or cabinets but not for building construction loads as it is only as strong as a 1x4 and will split.
Wow very nice.
Beautiful and inspiring construction
Forgive my ignorance, but does anyone know the English name of the chisel that is used at about 5:18 in the video?
Maybe a "slick" with a short handle.
This is amazing! What kind of wood? (How soft?)
♥
The real skill is when it is made to look simple
Master at his craft. I could watch this stuff all day.
Wow!! I don't think I've seen that type of joint before! I'm thinking of ways I can use it.
SIMPLE joinery??? You are joking or may be lying. It is not that simple what I saw in this video.
Its not simple. It’s EXTREMELY SIMPLE 😂
Perfect !! Congratulations !!
Excellent. What type of wood was it?
This is also called the total overkill joint.
thanks♥
Thank you for the lesson, excellent work my friend!
Excellent and informative video. I learned something today.
Great video! Every apprentice needs to watch this ..But.. Plz sharpen your saw blade!!! It will make your work soo much easier :)
absolutely beautiful, thanks for sharing!
Simply wonderful...!
Impressive, thanks
His tools are all cordless.
♥
Beautiful craftsmanship as always. Thanks so much for the inspiration!
What type of wood is this?
arte, simplemente arte
I'm impressed with your carpentry skills, but not with your choice of words. "extreme simple" this isn't. Greg (garden grove, CA usa)
Thank you……
What a master!
Este ensamble requiere de una práctica y maestría de años pero queda fenomenal. Todo un maestro
❤❤❤ tellement professionnel que tu fais paraître le travail. Bravos un vrai plaisir de suivre votre travail
I wish I had time to do this....I'm still on that screw it and glue it when it comes to building things for the house.
He makes it look so effortless, good stuff
Simple and soooo easy...😉
yes
That did not look very simple to me. Cool though.
Amazing craftsmanship ❤❤
Incredibly satisfying.
This guy does with hand tools what half the so called professionals can't do with power tools
It doesn't get any simpler than this.
The joint is a standard mortice and tenon, and all the better for that. The part that wraps around the outside of the post is a little weird, and wouldn't survive any wood movement or weather.......but the big deal is that after mis-naming dozens of videos for months if not years claiming "mitres" where none existed, here's a mitre, but the video title doesn't mention it! Now, I'm going to shout a bit: STOP HITTING WOOD WITH A STEEL HAMMER. USE A MALLET, OR USE A SACRIFICIAL BLOCK OF WOOD TO PROTECT YOUR WORK.
Because shouting on the internet always works, right?
@@Tiger313NL If success is measured by appreciable change, then no, it doesn't work at all, demonstrably. However, if your measure of success is feeling a bit better as a result, then............ ............yeah, you're right. It doesn't work.
@@MikeAG333 Hey, we all get like that sometimes. No worries. :)
Anyone know what kind of wood this is? Thanks.
Very beautiful joinery! But certainly not "extreme simple". 😅